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Jordan Nielson
Jordan Nielson

Posted on • Edited on • Originally published at jnielson.com

Demystifying @babel/preset-env

Originally published on jnielson.com.

Ideally my post Build Tools Demystified helped to clarify some of the basic ideas in play when using babel and webpack. If not, please let me know things that can be clarified or added further! I'd love to have this series by helpful to someone outside of the talk I give based on it. I know for me reading is significantly more digestable than listening to talks so I hope that this format helps someone.

One of the topics that I find really interesting when talking to people about Babel is the preset-env that they provide. Since Babel is an open source project, you can find the code for @babel/preset-env here, but in this post we'll dig into a little bit why it is such a popular preset for those using Babel. For reference, there are docs specifically for this preset which detail the options that it supports. Generally your usage of preset-env (hereafter I'll just call it "the preset"), could be as simple as having a babel config file that contains:

{
  "presets": ["@babel/preset-env"]
}

While this simple usage works, their docs state:

"We don't recommend using preset-env this way because it doesn't take advantage of its ability to target specific browsers."

I would add to that, since using it this way will result in transforming all your code to ES5 which in a lot of cases you don't need-unless you get to support really old environments. In most cases, at least where I've worked, we generally only supported relatively recent browsers, and one of the coolest features of the preset is that it integrates with Browserslist to allow you to use the same targets that other tools utilizes. For instance, you can use a .browserslistrc file to specify your targets with something like:

last 1 version
> 1%
maintained node versions
not dead

One of the benefits of using an approach like this is that you don't have to manually maintain what versions of the browsers and such that you are targeting, letting you instead focus on the code that you write.

Using the Debug option

In addition to the fabulous Browserslist integration, there's a number of other options that you can pass to the preset in order to customize or even debug it. For instance if you use it like:

{
  "presets": [
    [
      "@babel/preset-env",
      {
        "debug": true
      }
    ]
  ]
}

You'll get a bunch of useful debug information to help you know what plugins are being applied (and what browsers you're targeting that require them), something like the following:

@babel/preset-env: `DEBUG` option
Using targets:
{
  "android": "67",
  "chrome": "74",
  "edge": "17",
  "firefox": "66",
  "ie": "10",
  "ios": "12",
  "node": "10.16",
  "opera": "12.1",
  "safari": "12",
  "samsung": "8.2"
}
Using modules transform: false
Using plugins:
  transform-template-literals { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "ios":"12", "opera":"12.1", "safari":"12" }
  transform-literals { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-function-name { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-arrow-functions { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-block-scoped-functions { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-classes { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-object-super { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-shorthand-properties { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-duplicate-keys { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-computed-properties { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-for-of { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-sticky-regex { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-dotall-regex { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "firefox":"66", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-unicode-regex { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-spread { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-parameters { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-destructuring { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-block-scoping { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-typeof-symbol { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-new-target { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-regenerator { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-exponentiation-operator { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  transform-async-to-generator { "android":"67", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  proposal-async-generator-functions { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  proposal-object-rest-spread { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1" }
  proposal-unicode-property-regex { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "firefox":"66", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1", "samsung":"8.2" }
  proposal-json-strings { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1", "samsung":"8.2" }
  proposal-optional-catch-binding { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1", "samsung":"8.2" }
  transform-named-capturing-groups-regex { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "firefox":"66", "ie":"10", "opera":"12.1", "samsung":"8.2" }
Using polyfills: No polyfills were added, since the `useBuiltIns` option was not set.

The above was generated using the following Browserslist query: last 2 versions, current node. As you can probably guess, in most applications this includes way more than you actually need to support, in fact using npx browserslist 'last 2 versions, current node' prints out the following list right now:

and_chr 75
and_ff 67
and_qq 1.2
and_uc 11.8
android 67
baidu 7.12
bb 10
bb 7
chrome 75
chrome 74
edge 18
edge 17
firefox 67
firefox 66
ie 11
ie 10
ie_mob 11
ie_mob 10
ios_saf 12.2
ios_saf 12.0-12.1
kaios 2.5
node 10.16.0
op_mini all
op_mob 46
op_mob 12.1
opera 58
opera 57
safari 12.1
safari 12
samsung 9.2
samsung 8.2

Why are targets so useful and important?

If you don't need to support things like ie10, you should probably adjust your query to be something like the example used in the .browserslistrc file above. Running that query, npx browserslist 'last 1 version, > 1%, maintained node versions, not dead' gives the following output:

and_chr 75
and_ff 67
and_qq 1.2
and_uc 11.8
android 67
baidu 7.12
chrome 75
chrome 74
chrome 73
edge 18
edge 17
firefox 67
firefox 66
ie 11
ie_mob 11
ios_saf 12.2
ios_saf 12.0-12.1
kaios 2.5
node 8.16.0
node 12.5.0
node 10.16.0
op_mini all
op_mob 46
opera 58
safari 12.1
samsung 9.2

Doing this change we dropped support for some old and dead things, like bb 10 and bb 7 (the blackberry browser), and added support for more node versions (8 and 12). We also grabbed an extra chrome version, probably due to its current usage amount.

The preset's debug output for this list looks like this right now:

@babel/preset-env: `DEBUG` option
Using targets:
{
  "android": "67",
  "chrome": "73",
  "edge": "17",
  "firefox": "66",
  "ie": "11",
  "ios": "12",
  "node": "8.16",
  "opera": "46",
  "safari": "12.1",
  "samsung": "9.2"
}
Using modules transform: false
Using plugins:
  transform-template-literals { "android":"67", "ie":"11", "ios":"12", "safari":"12.1" }
  transform-literals { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-function-name { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"11" }
  transform-arrow-functions { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-block-scoped-functions { "android":"67" }
  transform-classes { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-object-super { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-shorthand-properties { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-duplicate-keys { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-computed-properties { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-for-of { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-sticky-regex { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-dotall-regex { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "firefox":"66", "ie":"11", "opera":"46" }
  transform-unicode-regex { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-spread { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-parameters { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"11" }
  transform-destructuring { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-block-scoping { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-typeof-symbol { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-new-target { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-regenerator { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-exponentiation-operator { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  transform-async-to-generator { "android":"67", "ie":"11" }
  proposal-async-generator-functions { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"11", "node":"8.16", "opera":"46" }
  proposal-object-rest-spread { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"11", "opera":"46" }
  proposal-unicode-property-regex { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "firefox":"66", "ie":"11", "node":"8.16", "opera":"46", "samsung":"9.2" }
  proposal-json-strings { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"11", "node":"8.16", "opera":"46", "samsung":"9.2" }
  proposal-optional-catch-binding { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "ie":"11", "node":"8.16", "opera":"46", "samsung":"9.2" }
  transform-named-capturing-groups-regex { "android":"67", "edge":"17", "firefox":"66", "ie":"11", "node":"8.16", "opera":"46", "samsung":"9.2" }
Using polyfills: No polyfills were added, since the `useBuiltIns` option was not set.

If your organization has decided to drop support for Internet Explorer entirely, you could append an exclusion to your query not ie 11, not ie_mob 11 and take those off the list as well. If you're going to do that, you might even be able to convince your organization to drop what is called "Android Browser" in caniuse ("android 67" above) since it has 0% usage, to reduce the amount of transforms you apply even more. So, add not android 67 to your query. Once you've done that, the preset debug output looks more like this:

@babel/preset-env: `DEBUG` option
Using targets:
{
  "chrome": "73",
  "edge": "17",
  "firefox": "66",
  "ios": "12",
  "node": "8.16",
  "opera": "46",
  "safari": "12.1",
  "samsung": "9.2"
}
Using modules transform: false
Using plugins:
  transform-template-literals { "ios":"12", "safari":"12.1" }
  transform-function-name { "edge":"17" }
  transform-dotall-regex { "edge":"17", "firefox":"66", "opera":"46" }
  transform-parameters { "edge":"17" }
  proposal-async-generator-functions { "edge":"17", "node":"8.16", "opera":"46" }
  proposal-object-rest-spread { "edge":"17", "opera":"46" }
  proposal-unicode-property-regex { "edge":"17", "firefox":"66", "node":"8.16", "opera":"46", "samsung":"9.2" }
  proposal-json-strings { "edge":"17", "node":"8.16", "opera":"46", "samsung":"9.2" }
  proposal-optional-catch-binding { "edge":"17", "node":"8.16", "opera":"46", "samsung":"9.2" }
  transform-named-capturing-groups-regex { "edge":"17", "firefox":"66", "node":"8.16", "opera":"46", "samsung":"9.2" }
Using polyfills: No polyfills were added, since the `useBuiltIns` option was not set.

These adjustments are important for a lot of reasons, but the biggest one is that each plugin that you use in Babel contributes to how long the process takes. While that might not seem like a huge deal in your application, it can add up. For those who didn't feel like counting, adjusting our targets reduced our list of transforms that we use from 28 to 9. While this does exclude some possible users, you'll want to work with your analytics to determine if that actually matters. If it does, you might look into the module/nomodule split to produce two different bundles, something that Jake Archibald has an excellent post on.

Another feature that the preset supports is the modules transform (you might have noticed that mentioned in the debug logs above). There's a number of modes for this transform, with the default being "auto" (usually ends up as commonjs). For those that use webpack to bundle your code, you'll want to set modules: false in order to allow webpack's cool features like tree shaking to work. If you don't set modules: false, babel will transform the import/export statements into require/module.exports statements (aka not ES6 modules), which webpack can't statically analyze. In cases for library code, you'll probably want to produce an ES6 modules build, and a commonjs build, but maybe not.

To sum up, @babel/preset-env is a smart preset - a collection of plugins that are enabled or disabled based on the targets you give it to transform your code into something compatible with your targets. Hopefully you learned something from this, I certainly did while writing it!

Cover Image courtesy of undraw.co

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